AP Lab 4 Diffusion and Osmosis

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Presentation transcript:

AP Lab 4 Diffusion and Osmosis

Think/Pair/Share Consider each of these questions • What is kinetic energy and how does it differ from potential energy? • What environmental factors affect kinetic energy and diffusion? • Why do these factors alter diffusion rates? How do they affect rates? • How are gradients important in diffusion and osmosis? • What is the explanation for the fact that most cells are small and have cell membranes with many convolutions? • Will water move into or out of a plant cell if the cell has a higher water potential than the surrounding environment? • What would happen if you applied saltwater to a plant? • How does a plant cell control its internal (turgor) pressure?

Diffusion Part 1: Why are cells small? • The student is able to use calculated surface area-to-volume ratios to predict which cell(s) might eliminate wastes or procure nutrients faster by diffusion (2A3 & SP 2.2). • The student is able to explain how cell size and shape affect the overall rate of nutrient intake and the rate of waste elimination (2A3 & SP 2.2).

Review of cell size lab Start with agar cubes with pH indicator. Agar turns yellow when acid diffuses into agar. Wait until 1 cube is totally diffused throughout. Which cell was able to be diffused most quickly? Let’s do some math. It took 8 minutes for the small cell to be nearly 100% diffused. What is diffusion rate? 1 cm 3 cm 2 cm

Part 1 Cell Size Data Analysis • Which surface area-to-volume ratio diffused the fastest? • Which surface area-to-volume ratio had the greatest diffusion depth? Did volume of solution outside the “cells” make a difference? • How might a cell’s shape influence the rate of diffusion? • What factors affect the rate of diffusion and how can these be tested?

Red blood cell SA/V = 600/1!!! Plant Root Hairs. Each “hair” is a single cell. Red blood cell SA/V = 600/1!!! Microvilli of epitheleal cell (lining) in the intestine

Diffusion & Osmosis Part 2 Will water cross the membrane? And which direction? Do the solutes cross the membrane (hypertonic, hypotonic, isotonic)? If you have two different solutes, do their molarities influence each other? Water? (i.e., does 1M NaCl influence 1M glucose?)